Arguably Japan's only painter
of international repute before World War II, Tsugouharu
Foujita (Leonard Foujita, 1886-1968) criticized
his pioneering avant-garde compatriot Jiro Yoshihara's
skittish borrowings from the repertory of artistic
styles as being "too influenced by others."
Yoshihara shifted from expressive realism to Bauhaus
and Russian Constructivist inspired works, took
to a neo-expressionist primitive style, and ended
up in abstraction. Foujita was just as eclectic.
He went through Realism, Cubism, Primitivism, apparent
fusions of Eastern and Western painting practices,
colorful and sometimes grotesque expressionism,
propaganda paintings for the "Holy" War,
and finished in a heady mix of Catholicism, caricature,
and fantasy.
Owing to difficulties with copyright and assembling
the now diffuse body of his work spread across
continents, there has been no large-scale retrospective
of the artist's oeuvre, and no chance to examine
the artist's career in full -- until now, in Tokyo,
Kyoto and Hiroshima, in "Tsugouharu Foujita:
120th Anniversary of His Birth."
Foujita proceeded to the Western course of painting
at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts and graduated
in 1910. He later reflected on the experience
as "no more than mere copying of a single
teacher." Venturing to France in 1913, he
soon visited Picasso's studio where he saw Cubist
works and paintings by the naïve artist Henri
Rousseau. The anecdotal result of the encounter
was that on returning to his hotel room, he threw
down his paint box, exclaiming "that is how
free painting should be."
The following early years in Paris were ones
of practice and experimentation. He was said to
have done 300 to 400 works in the Cubist style,
only of which a few survive, like "Cubistic
Still Life" (1914). His subsequent "Cubist"
development moved more in the direction of the
naïve style following Rousseau, like "Visionary
Landscape" (1917). All the while he was also
painting moody realistic landscapes of his French
surroundings like "Fortress in Paris"
(1917).
Foujita became a member of the Salon d'Automne
in 1919, but it was the distinctive body of work
he began submitting from around 1921 that won
him fame then and now. His "grand fond blanc"
-- milky white oil on canvas imparting a ceramic-like
appearance to the painting surface -- is amply
demonstrated by the exhibition in works such as
"Nude with Tapestry" (1923). The delicate
line work is often compared to traditional Nihonga
painting practice, but also finds sources in Foujita's
studies of Picasso and the Mexican Diego Rivera,
Greek jars and Egyptian art. Considerable financial
success followed and established Foujita's reputation
as one of the leading painters of "The School
of Paris," an eclectic group of expatriate
artists following after modernist masters such
as Picasso and Matisse. The "School"
itself was without stylistic or ideological continuity
-- a parallel borne witness to in examining Foujita's
artistic career.
By the end of the 1920s, Foujita was wavering
in his commitment to his trademark milky-white
reduced palette, and so he splashed into a colorful
world of expressionism that often emphasized bulbously
proportioned women. Leaving Paris in 1931 for
the Americas, he adopted expressionism as his
central artistic mode, and when he returned to
Japan in 1933 it continued in nostalgic form with
subject matter depicting a Japanese way of life
that was fast disappearing. The result was a desire
for a studio which he built in 1937 and pictured
in 1938 in "My Studio in Tokyo," decked
out with hibachi and dyed curtains in classical
Edo style.
That nostalgia for things Japanese nourished
Foujita's transition to a Social Realist style
of mural painting depicting war zones while in
the employ of the Army and Navy Ministries during
World War II. The painter's arm "must be
a gun," he ignominiously declared in the
1940s, and so he painted nationalist imagery like
"Compatriots on Saipan Island Remain Faithful
to the End" (1945), showing Japanese civilians
driven to despair, disemboweling themselves rather
than risk capture.
Criticism by the gadan (circle of painters) after
the war for his production of overtly nationalist
imagery inevitably rekindled Foujita's desire
to return to Paris, which he did in 1949 by way
of the United States. In 1955 he became a French
citizen and in 1959 a Catholic convert with the
baptismal name Leonard. There followed a host
of religious works like "Descent from the
Cross" (1959), the genesis of which lay as
early in his career as 1927 with more restrained
representational approaches as in "Adoration
of the Magi."
In the devout final years of his career he turned
to the portrayal of a fantastical cast of animals
and children that carry something of the appeal
of children's book illustrations. In these pictures
and other portraits like "Café"
(1949-63) he also returned in attenuated form
to his grand fond blanc.
Foujita's flights between countries, artistic
styles and even national identities evidence an
unsettled temperament, establishing him as a composite
figure whose oeuvre became disjointed and dilettantish.
His proximity to the giants of modernism served
to bolster his career, but at the same time, his
cobbling together and dilution of the styles of
his contemporaries inevitably position him as
a conservative, though popular, artist.